counterevidence

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English

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Alternative forms

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Etymology

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From counter- +‎ evidence.

Noun

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counterevidence (countable and uncountable, plural counterevidences)

  1. (philosophy, law, sciences) Evidence which tends to disprove a claim or hypothesis.
    • 1838, David King, “Two lectures, in reply to the speeches of Dr. Chalmers on church extension”, in Hume Tracts, Glasgow: David Robertson, page 21:
      Having been strongly pressed to do so, I gave counter-evidence, and I believe, in the opinion of the Commission, demolished the Doctor a second time.
    • 1975, Edward Kelly, “Curriculum Evaluation and Literary Criticism: Comments on the Analogy”, in Curriculum Theory Network, volume 5, number 2, page 102:
      As the alternative norms and counterevidences are uncovered, it is the evaluator's task to determine inconsistency, contradiction, and subterfuge, and then to render his own verdict.
    • 2007, Daniel A. Weiskopf, “Patrolling the Mind’s Boundaries”, in Erkenntnis, volume 68, number 2, page 273:
      People persevere in asserting all sorts of things in the face of apparent counterevidence.

References

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